Showing posts with label Peter Piot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Piot. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Lancet Opinion Piece Examines Progress Made Against HIV/AIDS

via Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report

There is also a "recurrent" myth that there is one "silver-bullet" solution to HIV prevention; however, "no approach will be enough on its own, and the promotion of one solution is ... irresponsible," the authors write. They continue that another "prevailing" myth is that there is little heterosexual transmission of HIV outside Africa and note that HIV transmission among women is rising worldwide, with "[m]ethods of transmission and affected groups" being "many and varied."

"Nearly 30 years into the AIDS epidemic, we are able to access our progress in tackling the disease with both increased knowledge and the benefit of hindsight," former UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot of Imperial College London, who also serves as an adviser on global health strategy to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Michel Kazatchkine, executive director of the Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; Mark Dybul of the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University and former U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator; and Julian Lob-Levyt of the GAVI Alliance write in a Lancet opinion piece. They add that the piece aims to examine "what we -- the international community -- got right, what we got wrong, and why we need to urgently dispel several emerging myths about the epidemic and the global response to it."

According to the authors, when "HIV was emerging in the early 1980s, we clearly underestimated the global effect that the disease would have, and that in only a few decades, tens of millions of people worldwide would become infected." They add, "The epidemic nowadays is the result of what 30 years ago was an unpredictable -- but tremendously potent -- combination of intimate personal behaviors ... and socioeconomic factors ... that have affected nearly every country worldwide." In addition, the international community underestimated "the extent to which stigma and discrimination -- against people living with HIV/AIDS and those most vulnerable to it -- would remain formidable obstacles to tackling AIDS," the authors write, adding that the "sense of urgency and solidarity that would eventually develop in the global AIDS epidemic, leading to an unusual convergence of political will, money and science" also was underestimated.

Other aspects of the HIV/AIDS pandemic were overestimated, the authors write. They add that despite innovations and successes regarding antiretroviral treatment, "we have also overestimated our capacity to devise technological solutions to prevent HIV," and "continued investments in new prevention technology remain a crucial part of the AIDS research agenda."

The author's point to the common myth that HIV prevention has not been successful overall -- which they say is contradicted by evidence it has been effective in several countries, adding that prevention is about behavior in addition to technology. They add that sustaining changes in sexual behavior "remains a major challenge," citing the possible "complacency about AIDS and the sense that a treatable disease is somehow less threatening than are other diseases."

There is also a "recurrent" myth that there is one "silver-bullet" solution to HIV prevention; however, "no approach will be enough on its own, and the promotion of one solution is ... irresponsible," the authors write. They continue that another "prevailing" myth is that there is little heterosexual transmission of HIV outside Africa and note that HIV transmission among women is rising worldwide, with "[m]ethods of transmission and affected groups" being "many and varied."

The authors write, "Alarmingly, a myth has begun to emerge that too much money is spent on AIDS," as countries face new financial difficulties while "competing for the attention of political leaders and donors." The myth that investments in AIDS efforts have been at the expense of underfunded health systems also needs to be dispelled, the authors write, adding that funds for HIV/AIDS efforts "are making a major contribution to the strengthening of health systems." The authors also address the myth that HIV/AIDS "has somehow been solved, writing, "We need to recognize that AIDS is a long-term event. Tackling it is complex, but our successes so far indicate what is possible." Increased efforts to examine epidemiological trends, "develop long lasting links with broader efforts to strengthen health systems and health workforces," continue investment in research, and make a "serious, concerted effort" to address stigma and discrimination are needed to "be anywhere close to the point at which we can truthfully say the fight against AIDS is being won" (Piot et. al, Lancet, 3/20).

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Piot Rails Against Homophobia at AIDS 2008

The following is an excerptsfrom a speech given by UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot at a pre-conference event called "The Invisible Men: Gay Men and Other MSM [Men Who Have Sex With Men] in the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic." The meeting was sponsored by the Global Forum on MSM & HIV. IRMA presented at this meeting. Click here for pictures and a link to the slides.

"There's a terrible underfunding of programs for MSM, and
yet this is the population where the epidemic is in most countries.

"There's something that, as a straight man, I really have a hard time understanding, and that is this obsessive homophobia that I find, and which tells me that there's something going on in the heads of people that must mean that they are having a major problem with their own sexuality. [Applause.] There may be other explanations, but this is my opinion, and I have been everywhere in the world and have meet people like that, including in the UN system. But it is totally absurd, and it's also cruel. I think that the title of this meeting is only too apt. I'm really more and more convinced that homophobia is one of the top five obstacles to really stopping this epidemic. That's where I think we need to probably have a more scientific, businesslike approach to how we tackle this. There are some really fantastic programs, and here, I would really like to pay tribute to Jorge Saavedra and the Mexican government for supporting him with its anti-homophobia campaign, and the whole of the activist groups. But there are not too many countries where this is happening, and yet there are so many places where these programs are needed.

"In a growing number of countries, we may be reaching a tipping point where working with MSM becomes really possible, and where we can see results. That didn't happen by coincidence. It's proof that some of our joint advocacy and insistence are bearing fruit. I feel strongly that our accountability in UNAIDS is not only to governments or our Program Coordination Board, but to the people. The charter of the UN says, "We the people," and so there is that kind of accountability, also. But it's much harder to translate into government structures, that's for sure."

Read more here, on TheBody.com.

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